Drew
Member
Hello Mutzrein:
Thanks for your question.
Here are my opinions about what happens to a person at death and beyond:
1. For "philosophical", scientific, and most recently Biblical and historical reasons, I have come to reject the dualist picture that we are a "soul living in a body". While I cannot make any pronouncements on the "true" nature" of the human person (who can?), I do believe that a person cannot be decomposed into "components" - a human person is a monistic, unified entity.
2. When someone dies, they cease to be subjects of experience of any kind - they "go to sleep".
3. At an event in the future (the "resurrection") all human beings are "re-constituted", again in an unified, non-divisible form. My opinion is that this new form could be best described as a "body".
4. Those who are redeemed by Christ live forever in a "surprisingly physical" sense in these new bodies.
5. Those whose sins have not been redeemed are annihilated (after they have been "resurrected"). They cease to exist.
Thanks for your question.
Here are my opinions about what happens to a person at death and beyond:
1. For "philosophical", scientific, and most recently Biblical and historical reasons, I have come to reject the dualist picture that we are a "soul living in a body". While I cannot make any pronouncements on the "true" nature" of the human person (who can?), I do believe that a person cannot be decomposed into "components" - a human person is a monistic, unified entity.
2. When someone dies, they cease to be subjects of experience of any kind - they "go to sleep".
3. At an event in the future (the "resurrection") all human beings are "re-constituted", again in an unified, non-divisible form. My opinion is that this new form could be best described as a "body".
4. Those who are redeemed by Christ live forever in a "surprisingly physical" sense in these new bodies.
5. Those whose sins have not been redeemed are annihilated (after they have been "resurrected"). They cease to exist.